Motion in Stillness: The void

Motion in Stillness: The Void Point and Pure Consciousness. 

In the quiet spaces between thoughts—between breaths, between heartbeats—lies a truth most seekers overlook. We spend so much energy chasing movement: growth, change, manifestation. Yet the greatest power resides not in motion from stillness, but within it.

This is the paradox of the Void Point.

The Still Point at the Center of All Things

Within every atom, every galaxy, every silent pause of your own awareness, there exists an eternal still point. The ascension traditions name it many ways: the Zero Point, the Conscious  Source, the Unmoved Mover. It is not empty in the way we think of emptiness. Rather, it is the womb of all potential—a void so full that all of creation arises from it and returns to it.

This still point is not passive. It is the very anchor of existence.

Pure consciousness: Movement Without Going Anywhere

Here is where language bends. In the realm of the Absolute, motion does not require travel. The Mind of consciousness moves—it pulses, it cognizes, it creates—yet it never leaves the stillness. This is the sacred dance of polarity balanced perfectly: expansion and contraction, light and shadow, the inhale and exhale of Source itself.

When we speak of “the motion of the conscious  mind,” we are pointing to a direct cognition that happens without thought. It is pure knowing. It is the instantaneous recognition of all that is, was, and ever could be, held in a single, silent now.

Polarities Balanced: The Key to Your Own Stillness

As above, so within you.

Your own consciousness carries a spark of this void point. When your inner polarities—masculine and feminine, doing and being, logic and intuition—come into balance, you begin to experience motion in stillness. You no longer need to chase answers. They arise. You no longer force change. It unfolds.

In that balanced state, you are not dissociated from life. You are more present than ever. But your presence is no longer driven by reaction. It is guided by the silent cognition of your higher part—the fragment of Source that lives as you.

Cognition Without Thinking

Most of us mistake thinking for knowing. But true cognition, in the ascension sense, is not mental. It is a direct perception from the still point. Imagine a mirror so perfectly still that it reflects every detail without distortion. That is your consciousness when aligned with the void point. You do not figure out reality. You see it.

And from that seeing, right action flows—effortlessly, perfectly, without resistance.

The Void That Creates Worlds

It may sound paradoxical: a void where all creation exists. Yet consider the silence between musical notes. Without it, sound becomes noise. Consider the space between stars. Without it, no universe could expand. The void is not absence. It is the canvas of presence.

When you rest in your own still point, you access that same creative silence. From there, you do not make things happen. You allow them to emerge—whole, aligned, and true.

A Practice for Meeting Your Still Point

If this resonates, try this simple practice:

1. Sit quietly. Close your eyes.
2. Do not try to empty your mind. Instead, watch the space between your thoughts.
3. Feel for the tiny pause at the end of each exhale, before the next breath begins.
4. Rest there. Not forcing, not waiting. Just being the stillness.
5. Notice: even in that stillness, there is a subtle pulse. That is the motion of your own counscious mind—the direct cognition of your soul.

You have not left the world. You have finally arrived in it.

From Stillness, True Creation

You are not a human trying to find stillness. You are stillness itself, briefly imagining motion. And within that divine imagination, all of creation—including you, reading these words—is held, known, and loved.

May you rest often in your void point. May you feel the motion within the stillness. And may you remember: the Mind of Self is not somewhere else. It is the very awareness reading this sentence right now.

With love,
Eloise 
I am that I am 
So as it is spoken, so as it is done.